Dillard, Chief Judge. In these consolidated appeals, Machelle P. Morton—f/k/a Machelle P. Macatee—appeals from the trial court’s order in a contempt proceeding following her divorce from her ex-husband, Edward Van Macatee, and from the court’s order correcting a clerical mistake in the final divorce decree. In Case Number A18A0514, Machelle appeals from the “corrected” divorce order, arguing that (1) the trial court’s factual findings, as contained in the original divorce order, are unsupported by the record; (2) the court erred in assessing attorney fees against her without a statutory basis or findings of fact in support of same; and (3) the “corrected” order contains additional factual errors. In Case Number A18A0515, Machelle appeals from the trial court’s order on competing petitions for contempt, arguing, inter alia, that the order constitutes an impermissible modification of the divorce decree outside the term of court. For the reasons set forth infra, in Case No. A18A0514, we affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion; and in Case No. A18A0515, we reverse.The record shows that Van and Machelle were married in April 2011, and separated in March 2015. At the time of their separation, they had separate IRA accounts (“Machelle IRA” and “Van SEP”), and shared a Keogh retirement account and a joint savings account designated as the “Emergency Fund” account. A few months later (on May 19, 2015), Machelle petitioned for divorce. Then, following a bench trial on January 3, 2017, the court entered its final judgment and decree of divorce, in which it stated:As for the division of the retirement accounts (Emergency Fund, Joint Emergency Fund, SEP-IRA and [Keogh]) this court finds, based on the evidence submitted and arguments of counsel, the amount to be divided is $390,493.00. That is to be divided in half between the parties ($195,246.50 each) with the following adjustments:
[Machelle's] ½ interest shall be reduced by $30,000.00 to give [Van] credit for his contributions to the marital property and the Home Equity Line of Credit. [Machelle's] ½ interest is further reduced in the amount of $10,000.00 to give [Van] credit for the charges [Machelle] made to his American Express credit card which then brings her ½ interest down to $155,256.50.